Reference:116619LB: Difference between revisions
| [checked revision] | [checked revision] |
Clean image captions and strip source-name clutter |
SEO: og:image + image_alt + og_type + timestamps |
||
| Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
|description=The 116619LB is the first white gold Submariner and the first Submariner with a Cerachrom ceramic bezel. Rolex introduced it at Baselworld 2008, two years… | |description=The 116619LB is the first white gold Submariner and the first Submariner with a Cerachrom ceramic bezel. Rolex introduced it at Baselworld 2008, two years… | ||
|keywords=Rolex, 116619LB, Submariner, specifications, reference guide | |keywords=Rolex, 116619LB, Submariner, specifications, reference guide | ||
|image=Ref 116619LB hero 2.jpg | |||
|image_alt=Rolex Submariner Ref. 116619LB | |||
|type=article | |type=article | ||
|og_type=article | |||
|published_time=2026-04-14T16:13:08Z | |||
|modified_time=2026-04-23T04:34:41Z | |||
|robots=index,follow,max-image-preview:large | |||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 04:01, 27 April 2026
Submariner → 116619LB
The 116619LB is the first white-gold Submariner and the first Submariner fitted with a Cerachrom ceramic bezel. Rolex introduced it at Baselworld 2008, two years before the steel 116610LN received ceramic in 2010. Collectors call it the Smurf, for the blue dial and blue bezel on a case that reads silver from across a room. White gold looks like steel in photographs, but weighs roughly twice as much, and the difference is obvious on the wrist the moment the watch goes on. That stealth-wealth quality drives much of the collector appeal.
The 116619LB was produced exclusively with a blue lacquer dial and blue bezel across its entire 2008–2020 run. No black-dial 116619 exists.

Core facts
| detail | value |
|---|---|
| reference | 116619LB |
| family | Submariner Date |
| production | approximately 2008 to 2020 |
| movement | caliber 3135 (date, quick-set, 28800 bph, ~48hr power reserve) |
| case | 40mm, full 18k white gold, Super Case |
| crystal | sapphire with Cyclops |
| water resistance | 300m |
| bezel | 18k white gold with blue Cerachrom ceramic insert, platinum-filled numerals |
| lume | Chromalight (blue glow) |
| bracelet | 18k white gold Oyster ref.97209 with Glidelock |
| dial | blue lacquer, maxi format, white gold markers |
| rehaut | engraved ROLEX ROLEX |
| nickname | Smurf |
| predecessor | none (first white gold Submariner) |
| successor | 126619LB |
Where it sits in the line
The 116619LB is the white-gold member of the ceramic-era Submariner generation. The steel 116610 arrived in 2010, the Rolesor 116613 in 2009, the full yellow-gold 116618 in 2008, and the full white-gold 116619LB alongside it — the white and yellow gold pair launched together as the first ceramic-bezel Submariners, with steel and two-tone following.
Yellow-gold Submariners date back to the 1680/8 era, and Rolesor arrived with the 16613. White gold was new territory — a precious-metal Submariner that could pass as steel, with the weight and the market signaling that a gold Submariner never offered.
Production outline
The 116619LB ran from 2008 to 2020. Some sources treat 2008 as the catalog introduction year with retail deliveries starting in 2009. No mid-run changes are documented. The reference was always low-volume — white-gold sport Rolex watches are produced in much smaller numbers than their steel or yellow-gold siblings.
Movement notes
Caliber 3135 throughout — the same movement used in the 116610, the 116613, and the 116618. Quick-set date, 28,800 vph, Microstella regulation, Parachrom blue hairspring. The premium over the steel 116610LN runs entirely on case material, dial, and bracelet rather than on the mechanics. The 126619LB successor moved to caliber 3235 with a 70-hour power reserve.
Dial map
Blue lacquer (the only dial)
Blue lacquer dial with Maxi-format luminous markers and Chromalight lume. The lacquer reads differently from the sunburst blues on the 116618LB and 116613LB — deeper, more uniform, without the directional shimmer of a sunburst finish. It holds its color across lighting conditions rather than shifting with the angle of the light.
White-gold markers and hands on that blue lacquer produce a cool palette: platinum-toned metal against dense blue, where the 116618LB's gold-on-sunburst reads warm and rich. The two references sit on opposite sides of the same blue-dial generation.
Case, bezel, crystal, and crown

Case
40mm 18k white gold in Super Case proportions — broader lugs than the five-digit era, with crown guards present and a Triplock crown sealing to 300m. The case back is solid 18k white gold. From across a room, the primary visual identifier is the blue dial and bezel; the case itself reads as steel.
Bezel
Blue Cerachrom ceramic insert matching the dial. Numerals and graduation marks are filled with platinum rather than gold — a visual distinction from the 116618, which uses gold filling to match its yellow-gold case. Platinum filling gives a silver-grey tone that works with the white-gold case. Cerachrom does not fade, scratch, or discolor.
Crystal
Sapphire with Cyclops at 3 o'clock and anti-reflective coating on the inner surface.
Hallmarks
Hallmarks follow the standard Swiss precious-metal system. The St. Bernard "Barry" mark is the Swiss precious-metals stamp used post-1995, replacing the older Helvetia bust mark. Markings appear on the mid-case under the lugs, on the case back, and on bracelet blades. The 750 stamp indicates 18k — 750 parts per thousand — gold content.
Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes
Bracelet
Full 18k white-gold Oyster ref.97209 with Glidelock offering roughly 20mm of micro-adjustment. The finishing is all brushed — no polished center links as on the 116618 or 116613, a choice that reinforces the reference's steel-appearance strategy. The bracelet is unchanged across the production run.
Special branches
No special branches, and a single configuration throughout — one of the simplest references to catalog in the modern Submariner line. The 116619LB is also the only ceramic-bezel Submariner to keep a flat, non-sunburst blue dial for its entire run; the 116613LB and 116618LB both transitioned from flat to sunburst mid-production, while the 116619LB's lacquer stayed constant.
Weight
Rolex Forum owners report approximately 226.8g with 12 bracelet links fitted.
Historical market and auction record
The 116619LB often trades above the yellow-gold 116618 despite comparable material cost. Historical firsts, low production volume, and the stealth-wealth character combine to place it among the highest-value modern Submariners on the secondary market. It is well represented both in dealer inventories and at auction.
Sources
- History of the Rolex Submariner - Part 2, The 55XX References and 1680 Date — Tom Mulraney, Monochrome
- The 1916 Company Smurf guide — The 1916 Company, The 1916 Company
- The Rolex Submariner: A Complete Collector's Guide — Stephen Pulvirent, Sotheby's
- Bob's Watches two-tone Submariner history — Bob's Watches editorial staff, Bob's Watches
- Gray & Sons Submariner Date history — Gray & Sons editorial, Gray & Sons
- Rolex Submariner Reference Guide — Professional Watches editorial, Professional Watches